Members of the self-proclaimed government called 'Donetsk Republic' vote
during their meeting at the regional administration building that they
had seized earlier in Donetsk, Ukraine, on Thursday. Photo:AP
Ukraine’s leaders appear to have backed away from threats to use force
to crush pro-Russian protests in the country’s eastern regions amid
reports that elite anti-terror commandos refused to storm the buildings
seized by the protesters.
The deadline set by Kiev for the protesters to free the occupied
government offices in Donetsk and Lugansk expired on Friday morning,
with security forces making no attempt to storm the buildings. Acting
Interior Minister Arsen Avakov had earlier pledged to clear the
buildings within 48 hours.
According to Ukrainian media reports, the elite Alfa counter-terrorism group has refused to attack the protesters.
“We will act strictly according to law,” Alfa commandos were reported to
have said. “Our group has been set up to free hostages and combat
terrorism.”
Acting Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk promised to grant more powers to
the regions, including the right to hold local referendums.
“In the framework of the changed constitution, we will be able to
satisfy specific requests of every single region,” Mr Yatsenyuk said at a
meeting with the governors and other officials of Ukraine’s eastern and
southern regions in Donetsk on Friday.
Mr Yatsenyuk did not spell out details of the proposed reforms and his
vague promise is unlikely to mollify the protesters. The Ukrainian
government plans to unveil the new constitution on April 15, but it has
flatly rejected the protesters’ demand of federalisation of Ukraine.
Mr Yatsenyuk refused to meet with the protesters during his one-day
visit to Donetsk on Friday but promised to have a televised call-in
conference with its residents.
The protesters in Donetsk, Lugansk and Kharkiv initially demanded
self-rule for Ukraine’s eastern industrial heartland, but after Kiev
rejected their demands, they vowed to split from Ukraine and join Russia
through a referendum similar to the one held in Crimea last month.
Acting President Oleksandr Turchynov has offered immunity from
prosecution for hundreds of protesters holed up in government offices in
Donetsk and Lugansk if they clear the seized buildings but the
activists refused to climb down. On Thursday they received
reinforcements from local coal mines.
Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said that Russia has no plans to annex Ukraine’s southeastern regions.
“We do not and cannot have such ambitions. This would go against
Russia’s fundamental interests,” Mr Lavrov said in a TV interview on
Friday.
“We want Ukraine to be united in its current borders, but with full
respect for its regions. We call it federation, but we do not insist on
using this term. The main thing for Ukraine is to carry out a
constitutional reform with the participation of all its regions and to
hold presidential, parliamentary and local elections on this basis, so
that the regions elect their own legislatures and governors,” the
Russian Foreign Minister said.
He expressed the hope that Mr. Yatsenyuk will honour his promise of reforms.
“It’s a good thing Yatsenyuk has visited the southeast… He should have
done it much earlier, as we’ve been telling your American and European
partners,” Mr Lavrov said.
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